When Sylvia Chan apologised last week, many thought it’d be the end of the saga, and NOC will continue to prosper.

Well, it turns out to be the beginning of the end.

Two days ago, as a blog post filled with receipts of Sylvia Chan’s alleged toxic behaviour was published by her current and former employees, and it’s no longer just an issue of a boss who has a bad temper: some actions that were alleged could be downright illegal, like using the company funds for personal use, throwing stuff that hit an employee and even…sex for service.

In other words, putting out an apology again might not suffice this time around; and sending lawyer’s letters would be pointless if the claims are true. Watch this video to the end to know why a lawyer’s letter might not work:

YouTube video

It doesn’t take long for something else to happen.

All Videos in The Thirsty Sisters Hosted by Sylvia Chan Suddenly Disappear

The Thirsty Sisters is a YouTube channel by Sylvia and Nina, who’s Ryan’s cousin.

The relatively new channel, which was created last year, is hosted by the two ladies who speak at length about various topics, but they’re usually extremely juicy topics like, erm, answering streaming questions about sex and love.

Titles and thumbnails would usually be extremely attractive, like one whereby they say one of them is dating someone (but of course, it’s not revealed in the video).

According to its YouTube description, the channel is about their “raw and real journey of living our best lives, crying over love/dating struggles and sharing our hardest lessons together.”

Unlike videos in NOC, the videos comprise just the two of them talking, and video lengths can be up to half an hour.

The videos are also repurposed into podcasts.

I’ve got to admit: I’ve watched (or listened, to be specific) a few of them and despite what you think of Sylvia, that woman can talk very well.

With 32k followers, the channel has over 50 episodes, but today, this happened:

Interestingly enough, contents in the channel community section are still there:

Its Instagram account has been removed as well, and its Tiktok account is now private.

But contents in its Spotify account and Telegram channel are still available, and since its Telegram channel shares the YouTube videos, clicking into the link shows that the videos are “private”:

According to the folks from Hardwarezone forums, they noticed that the channel appears to have removed its contents since early this morning.

NOC Channel Losing More Subscribers

It’s not just Sylvia’s channel that’s taking a hit. NOC isn’t spared, too.

A year ago, NOC published a video to celebrate them reaching one million subscribers:

YouTube video

They now have 990k subscribers instead, and according to SocialBlade, people started to unsubscribe from 13 October 2021.

Also, interesting enough, the channel appears to have its verification tick removed.

Previously, you can clearly see the tick:

Image: cardinaldigital.com

But now, the verified tick is no longer there:

Police Now Involved

Yes, even our men and women in blue are involved, too.

According to Mothership.sg, the Singapore Police Force did receive a police report, and they’re looking into the matter.

Lest you’re not aware, for civil cases (like breaking a contract), the police won’t be involved. Instead, they would only be involved for criminal cases.

In this instance, it could’ve been the allegation that Sylvia used one of her talents to barter sex for courier services for her new venture.

It’s unknown, of course, because this is just the second episode.

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Featured Image: YouTube (The Thirsty Sisters)

By Frozen

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